Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Would you like some Squash with your Squash?

It’s summer time, and in the garden that usually means there is an overabundance of squash.  Yellow squash, crookneck squash, zucchini, cucumbers (that kind’a counts as a squash, right???). 
Our yellow squash and zucchini have taken off and I can’t cook them fast enough.  One of the last people who came here to pick up some goat milk left with a bag of squash. If we lived in a neighborhood I’d be sticking bags in random mailboxes.
Squash casserole, zucchini bread, sautéed squash with onions and breaded and fried squash (artery-hardening-goodness!).  I’ve even started putting slices of zucchini in my ten-pound stuffed pizza.  Great way to get “rid” of zucchini and goat cheese at the same time.


My winter squash plants are also taking off.  I’ve actually planted two batches of butternut, the last one about a month ago.  I’ve never planted winter squash before so I’m hoping to be able to root -cellar some of them and see how long they will last through the winter.

We also started a tractor tire of potatoes in wasted hay.  Never planted them before so this was kind of an experiment.  Nothing fancy, just some of the store bought ‘taters that started growing eyes; I even think Paul put in a sweet potato slip.  I wasn’t really sold on growing potatoes as they can be purchased on sale pretty much dirt cheap and they’ll keep a long while.  I also didn’t think I’d have time to do a large crop of potatoes, but now I wish we did.  They are turning out pretty easy to take care of.  But we haven’t actually harvested any yet so I guess I should keep my yap shut until we do. 
My potato vines.  At least I think they're potatoes.
Never grew them before so for all I know they could be something else.

The tomatoes are doing only marginally well.  It also doesn’t help that the stinking chickens have taken to picking at the red ones and leaving half-eaten tomatoes in the raised beds.  I swear I read somewhere that people would let their chickens out in their gardens to pick off the bugs and that they would leave the tomatoes alone.  Apparently my chickens didn’t get the memo.  The stupid biddies won’t even eat the tomato hornworms when I hand-deliver one to them (another reason the tomatoes aren’t doing very well).  Hornworms are scarrrryyyyy looking bugs!  I was picking them off and putting them in a dish (no, not a side-dish) for chicken food and noticed that they make clicking sounds when they are mad.  I think it’s their “teeth” (do worms have teeth????) grinding together to make the noise.  Freaky. 
Guess I don’t really blame the chickens for not eating them.

6 comments:

  1. OMG! I hope I never have to see those vampire worms when I am down there!

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  2. Cut your squash into rounds and freeze them on a cookie sheet. Then put them into freezer bags. That way you can have squash in the winter. I do this every summer! They are sooooooo goooooooood!

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  3. You will like the Butternuts. They will keep all winter and then some. Store them in a cool, dry place (not a root cellar) that doesn't freeze.

    I make 'pumpkin' pies from mine.

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  4. Christine; I'm saving them all for your visit. Don't forget to try my "special" side dish during dinner! :)

    SFG; I don't know why I don't freeze more veggies! (Maybe because they are chock full already). Will have to try that now, thanks for the idea.

    gld; I LOVE butternuts! When I paid a fortune for them this winter at the grocery store I vowed to grow my own. Thanks for the storage tip.

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  5. Looks like a potato plant(s) to me! I am growing mine in tires, too. We can compare! I don't think I would want to meet one of those bugs in a dark place...I am waiting, impatiently, for any kind of squash plant.

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  6. Oh my, I don't even have a zucchini squash on the vine and they are so small anyway. I do however, have some baby cukes starting to peek out. My plants are small this year with our very cool,wet and windy spring/summer. I am hoping to harvest before frost takes over in late September. We planted 70 potato plants but have suffered from insects and I think, blight. It's killing our leaves and stems. I've sprayed until there's no tomorrow, but we'll see. Last year I was able to go totally pesticide free in our garden. Until we got these awful green worms in our broccoli. Even after soaking is salt water etc, they were there and I couldn't freeze them even after picking the bceatures off because if I were to eat a broccoli I would be thinking about these gross, green worms and wouldn't enjoy my food.

    Happy Harvesting!

    http://simpleeverydayliving.blogspot.com/

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